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My main PC runs on XP. My old PC ran win 98. I was thinking of taking the hardrive of the old PC and slaving it to the new PC. I am assuming there shouldnt be any issues with XP seing it as a new drive and me be able to take out my mp3's from the old drive, or because is 2 different versions of windows would I have a problem. I do not want to go thru the work of taking the pc apart then slaving the drive and it wont work.

2006-10-13 15:34:38 · 12 answers · asked by Cyrinos 4 in Computers & Internet Hardware Desktops

12 answers

First I am assuming your old 98 PC died as you not moved then the easy way usb pen or CD/DVD media

Installing 2 drives with an 2 OSs in a computer can some times cause big conflicts so I not recommend it however there is a way to get the data.

Which is to make the old drive an external with a external 3.5 enclosure which run about 20-30 bucks so no conflict can occur and is almost as fast as having it internal if it using USB 2

One really nice thing is you can use it as a back up drive for important data and you can also easily Move it to a second computer and even go over to someones house to share the data if you desired as it is a lot easier, quicker and lighter then dragging your PC over

2006-10-13 15:59:41 · answer #1 · answered by Magnusfl 3 · 0 0

It should be fine,.. as long as the jumpers of both the new and old hard drives are in the right place (master or slave). Make sure the old hard drive is a set to be a slave. When it is, your computer won't boot off of it.

When you want to get your data, you first go to "my computer" then your see your other drive. If I were you, I would take all the stuff you want off of it and transfer it onto your new one. When your done doing that, reformat it so you get rid of 98. After reformating it you can use it as a back-up or a storage hard drive.. I hope that helped! Good luck

2006-10-13 15:40:36 · answer #2 · answered by ? 2 · 2 0

As long as both drives are of the same type, eg: IDE in theory you can do that.
But, I would not recommend it, my thought would be that the old drive will be a 5400 rpm and your new one is 7400 rpm, if you slave the drives both will run at the slower speed.
With the prices of HDD's these days, I'd get a bigger drive and use the old one for playing sound files etc.
You can hook the pc's together and use the FIle Transfer Wizard in XP to move your mp3's to your new pc.

2006-10-13 15:39:13 · answer #3 · answered by OzHawk 3 · 0 1

It depends just what you want to acheive here. To dual boot, you could just add the drive as a secondary master. If you just want to expand storage space, make a backup image of your win98 drive first, and a seperate backup of your mp3 files, then format your old pc's hard drive.
With the drive formatted, WinXP will see and add the drive with no problems, however if you have your XP HDD partitioned, any logical drives will get bumped up one drive letter assignment.

2006-10-13 19:02:08 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

The neatest, easiest and list confusing trouble free way of doing this is to copy the files you need from the Win 98 drive to CD's or other media, and transferring them to your XP machine; then format the old 98 drive, remove it from the old machine and install it to the new one as a slave or whatever you want it to be used for.

NDS

2006-10-13 16:00:02 · answer #5 · answered by Nikolas S 6 · 0 1

Good Question, Answer NO you should not have any problems! One thing to consider is the file system that you will be using though. XP (Originally named NT 5.1) can use NTFS. Windows 98 is can not "see"/understand" this file system since it can only use Fat 16 or Fat 32. I very highly suspect you are using Fat32.

Short answer, go ahead, should be no problem!

2006-10-13 15:39:12 · answer #6 · answered by Scott_mct 2 · 0 0

Win 98 uses normally FAT32 file system, but this is no problem for XP. XP is capable to read NTFS and FAT32 at the same time.

2006-10-13 15:40:00 · answer #7 · answered by frime 6 · 0 0

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2016-12-13 07:53:48 · answer #8 · answered by zell 4 · 0 0

Personally i would say get an external drive bay, just because a lot of people like doing it this way for the sheer fact that its just plug in and go. since most people dont like messing with computer components...throw your old drive in there, and then plug it into your new computer, this way it'll be an easy way to transfer, and also you'll have a sort of mobile storage...

2006-10-13 16:10:29 · answer #9 · answered by blazingwing007 2 · 0 0

Slaving it will not have a problem. Make sure the old HD is connected on the secondary IDE/EIDE channel. If you put the secondary drive on the same IDE/EIDE cable with your primary drive that has XP, you will run into dual O/S' probs.

2006-10-13 15:37:44 · answer #10 · answered by itguru5354 1 · 0 2

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